Know Brett Kavanaugh bio, career, debut, wife, age, height, awards, favorite things, body measurements, dating history, net worth, car collections, address, date of birth, school, residence, religion, father, mother, siblings, and much more.
Director Doug Liman announced his new documentary at the festival. Then new tips began pouring in.
Amanda Petrusich on the British band UB40, and the connection between the band’s music and an alleged bar-fight involving the Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
Kavanaugh didn’t need to impress the public at large. He had a much smaller audience in mind.
Know Brett Kavanaugh bio, career, debut, wife, age, height, awards, favorite things, body measurements, dating history, net worth, car collections, address, date of birth, school, residence, religion, father, mother, siblings, and much more.
Kavanaugh’s environmental philosophy is industry above all else
Conservative parents look at liberal hate and think, “They could do that to my son.”
Amy Davidson Sorkin writes about the first day of Senate hearings in the Supreme Court confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh.
Across its home page, you’ll find “We Believe Survivors” in big text.
A large-scale empirical analysis of Kavanaugh’s D.C. Circuit opinions suggests he’s not that interested in precedent.
Whether inside a federal courtroom or an Ivy League classroom, US Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh assumes multiple roles. They all demand respect; in each, he sets the rules.
The Supreme Court nominee's strategy is classic.
From charges against Harvey Weinstein to the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation vote to the ongoing drive for accountability, here’s where the #MeToo movement stands today.
Politicians on both sides of the aisle are calculating the political costs of this confirmation process.
Jeannie Suk Gersen on the consequences of Brett Kavanaugh’s ugly Supreme Court confirmation process and the contrasting testimony of Christine Blasey Ford.
Brett Kavanaugh issued his first opinion in an obscure arbitration case. Unlike his testy, Senate confirmation vote in October, it was unanimous.
President Trump teed off on the New York Times Monday after the paper was forced to issue an editor's note about its weekend report on Brett Kavanaugh accusations.
On Friday, September 29, Frank Bruni wrote a column for the New York Times that ran with the headline, “Brett Kavanaugh Loves His Beer.” The piece focused on Kavanaugh’s persistent mention of beer (more than 30 times, but who’s counting) during his Senate testimony on the alleged sexual assault of C
From charges against Harvey Weinstein to the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation vote to the ongoing drive for accountability, here’s where the #MeToo movement stands today.
Thursday’s hearing didn’t prove whether Kavanaugh assaulted Ford. But we do know the Supreme Court nominee wasn’t honest in his testimony.
Ginsburg returned to work two weeks ago despite being hospitalized for three cracked ribs. But the ailing 85-year-old jurist has faced questions about how much longer she will serve.
After reviewing FBI interview reports about Brett Kavanaugh's past, the WH found "no corroboration of the allegations of sexual misconduct."
Every issue since 1923
A roundup of editorial cartoons from Sept. 23 to Sept. 28.
Ronan Farrow and Jane Mayer on an allegation of sexual misconduct lodged against Brett Kavanaugh, Donald Trump’s second Supreme Court nominee, and the response by Senator Dianne Feinstein and Congresswoman Anna Eshoo.
But Republicans don’t care
A former classmate of Brett Kavanaugh's accuser has deleted her claim that everyone knew of the alleged misconduct.
Drama surrounding a botched New York Times excerpt of ‘The Education of Brett Kavanaugh’ threatens to eclipse important revelations.
The Senate confirmed Brett Kavanaugh, 53, to the Supreme Court Saturday, where he could easily serve for more than two decades and change how the nation's laws are interpreted.
The latest smear on Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh is a disaster for Democrats, and everyone seems to know it except the party’s presidential candidates. No sooner had The New York Times pub…
Eren Orbey writes about how Delta Kappa Epsilon (DKE), the embattled Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s college fraternity, was forced into exile at Yale.
Trump’s Supreme Court nominee grew up in Washington and lives in one of its most affluent neighborhoods, among Democrats who avoid talking politics with him.
New text messages suggest the Supreme Court nominee and his lawyers contacted old classmates in an effort to discredit Deborah Ramirez, NBC reports.
Brett Kavanaugh, associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 2018. He was narrowly confirmed by the U.S. Senate following contentious hearings at which he was accused of having sexually assaulted a female acquaintance in the early 1980s, when both were high-school students.
On Friday, September 29, Frank Bruni wrote a column for the New York Times that ran with the headline, “Brett Kavanaugh Loves His Beer.” The piece focused on Kavanaugh’s persistent mention of beer (more than 30 times, but who’s counting) during his Senate testimony on the alleged sexual assault of C
Three years after his polarizing confirmation hearings, the Supreme Court’s 114th justice remains a mystery.
Brett Kavanaugh told Harvard Law School that he would no longer be able to teach a planned course in January.
Jeannie Suk Gersen on the partisan reactions from both Democrats and Republicans at the confirmation hearings for Brett Kavanaugh, Donald Trump’s Supreme Court Justice nominee.